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Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Personal Note: In Memoriam, Brandi - UPDATED

UPDATED: 1/17/14, 12:15 AM - I added a few more pictures, Brandi as a pup, another with Matthew, and one with my wife and Matthew.As many of you now know, our beloved Yellow Labrador
Retriever, Brandi, passed away a number of weeks ago.She had cirrhosis of the liver due to canine
hepatitis and lymphoma, a double whammy from which it was impossible to
treat.The hepatitis was something she
had for quite some time.She nearly died
from it a year and a half before, but she responded to treatment then.This time no matter what we did her liver
function numbers kept getting worse, and then when we decided to do a biopsy
(we didn’t know whether it was hepatitis, canine copper storage disease, or
some liver inflammation from something toxic she might have picked up) they
found her spleen to contain cancerous nodules which turned out to be
lymphoma.I don’t know if she felt pain
in her last days, but we could tell she wasn’t well and she barely ate.We tried to coax her with all sorts of her
favorite foods, but other than some turkey from Thanksgiving she just didn’t
have an appetite.

We got Brandi from a breeder near Pittsburg, which
is about seven hours drive from where we live.I found the breeder on the internet.She was from a litter of three, the light female of three females, and I
put dibs on her before she was even born.We waited for her birth like expected parents and the breeder sent us
photos the day after she was born.We
couldn’t wait to bring her home.We
picked her up just before Christmas.She
trembled on the long car ride back, and I think that traumatized her against
car rides for the rest of her life.She was
anxious on every car ride she ever had.Actually the last car ride to the vet where we ended it all was probably
the only one she wasn’t anxious, which goes to show how ill she must have
felt.It killed me that her last day
required a forty minutes long car ride.I wished her last day didn’t entail that.

The way I always think of Brandi, and this goes back
to her pup days, is that she was a dog’s dog.Some dogs, like Sasha our previous dog, living amongst humans begin to
take on human qualities.Brandi loved to
do doggy things all her life.She loved
to bark, chew bones, spring after birds, chase squirrels and cats, protect her
territory from her perch against the front glass slider and bark at the
pedestrians in the street, and call out to the other dogs.She loved the company of dogs, and though she
never hurt a fly, she could roughhouse with Rottweilers and Pit Bulls.She was fearless.An aggressive dog never intimidated her; she
assumed they all wanted to play, but when they showed their teeth she could
show hers back too.She would go from
roughhousing on one corner of our walks to sniffing and rubbing shoulders with
the friendly dogs on the next.Once catching
me by surprise and dragging me along (she was very strong) she lunged after a
kitten on the street that was caught unaware.To my shock she actually caught the kitten, not with her mouth, but by
hovering over it, and instead of biting she licked it, until the kitten
realized the huge dog over her and darted away.

Brandi was the sweetest dog you would ever
know.There wasn’t a mean bone in her
body.She loved to bark, and her barks
could be loud.She had strong
lungs.When strangers came her barks
held them in their tracks.But then you
heard the rhythm of her barks, a rhythm of threes—woo, woo, woo—woo, woo, woo—woo,
woo, woo—with rising upscale notes made you realize she was there to rub up against
you.She just wanted affection.And she was persistent.As with our first dog, I refused to let
Brandi on the sofas.But she wouldn’t
take no for an answer, and once she got her way she would squeeze between me
and Rochelle on a two person love seat.She was a ninety-five pound Lab who thought she was a lap dog.She was always pressed up against one of
us.And then she got her way again by
climbing into our bed.It wasn’t so bad
at first at the foot of the bed, but by morning she found a way to angle in so
that I was half falling off.

When Brandi was a pup we thought she was dumb.After all, our previous dog, Sasha, was a
Golden Retriever and smarter than most humans.Brandi, we thought, couldn’t possibly measure up.She didn’t pick up on training at first.In fact she almost failed her dog training
class.But it wasn’t from a lack smarts.She just had an exuberant personality.When we were in private she performed her
commands flawlessly.But at the class
with all the people and dogs around, with play noise and barking sounds, and with
the smell of foods in the air, she just wanted to engage people and join the
action.She really wanted to play with
the other dogs.

So we thought her dumb but she repeatedly outwitted
me.As a pup we would limit her to the
kitchen when we were out, especially since both of us worked and she was alone
for a good part of the day.I would
block her in the kitchen.Wouldn’t you
know it, when we got back she was out and roaming the house.Usually she would be on the top of the
upstairs landing since she knew how to climb the stairs but hadn’t yet learned how
to go down.I would say she would escape
just about every day no matter what adjustments I made.It came to the point that we decided to call
her Houdini.I never did know how she
kept getting out.

And really I have to say she might have been smarter
than Sasha.In one of the fields we’d
walk to, there’s one ball field that sectioned off a playground with a high
chain linked fence.I would throw a
tennis ball over the fence and she knew how to go down about forty yards to the
playground entrance, make her way through the playground on this chopped up
rubber tire turf, the slides and jungle gyms, forty yards back, find the tennis
ball, and make her way back out and to me.It’s not like I trained her.She
just figured it out herself.All I did
was throw the ball over, and she came up to the fence, looked at the ball, and
ran toward the entrance.And what joy
she had when she came out with the ball and ran towards me.Like most Labs, she did nothing at half
speed.

Brandi was just a great family member.She would always be around one of us.Once Rochelle stopped working Brandi became
her shadow, lying by her in the kitchen as she cooked or by her feet while on
the computer.There was just a special
bond between the two.If Rochelle and I
were sitting on different sofas, she would be by Rochelle or on the sofa with
her head on Rochelle’s lap.Her greatest
act of love was in accepting the baby when we brought Matthew home.We worried she might be jealous as some dogs
who have established their role in a household might be.We worried she might be aggressive with the
baby.But she just sniffed his tush and
tried not to bump into him.And she
stood under his high chair hoping for food to fall down.She loved us and we loved her.

She has such a pretty face! Her puppy photos are adorable, so sweet. You'll miss her for a long time but she also will provide wonderful memories for you and how wonderful that Matthew's first experience with a pet was so positive.